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The Lewandowski Effect: How a Missing Blanket and a Senate Hearing Brought Down Kristi Noem

Politics ✍️ Seán O'Reilly 🕒 2026-03-05 21:39 🔥 Views: 2
Corey Lewandowski and Kristi Noem

If you've been scrolling through the news over the past 48 hours, you'd be forgiven for thinking you've stumbled onto the set of a political drama that's lost the plot. We've got a missing heated blanket, a fired pilot, a $220 million ad campaign featuring a cabinet secretary who looks like she stepped out of a central casting, and at the centre of it all: Corey Lewandowski, Donald Trump's pugnacious 2016 campaign manager. The whole circus came to a head this week, and the fallout has landed Kristi Noem out of a job at the Department of Homeland Security.

Let's rewind. For months, the rumours have been swirling around the DHS. Lewandowski, officially a "special government employee" (a title he's apparently stretched well past its 130-day limit), has been glued to Noem's side. He wasn't just there for moral support. According to internal government memos that surfaced this week, the guy was practically stamping the paperwork. A senior Democratic senator dropped a grenade during a Judiciary Committee hearing, citing documents that revealed Lewandowski personally approved a multimillion-dollar equipment contract last summer. When that senator asked Noem directly if Lewandowski had a role in approving contracts, her answer was a flat, unequivocal "no". That answer, as it turns out, didn't age well.

The 'Tabloid Garbage' Hearing

That Tuesday hearing was a masterclass in political awkwardness. Noem was there to talk about immigration enforcement, but the Democrats had other plans. A California congresswoman cut to the chase, asking point-blank if the Secretary had ever had "sexual relations" with her top adviser. Noem, with her husband Bryon sitting stoically right behind her, swatted it away as "tabloid garbage".

But the room knew. Everyone knew. When a Florida Democrat urged her to just say "no" for the record, she pivoted into a full-blown confrontation, accusing him of implying "conservative women are stupid or sluts". It was a moment of high political theatre, but it was the answer she didn't give about the contracts—not the affair rumours—that seems to have tripped the wire legally. That senator is now demanding she amend her testimony, reminding her that there are "criminal penalties" for making false statements to Congress.

From Furious Phone Calls to Firing

While Noem was dodging questions on the Hill, Donald Trump was on the phone with GOP allies, fuming. The thing that really got his back up? It wasn't the affair gossip. It was the money. Specifically, the $220 million DHS ad campaign that featured Noem so heavily you'd think she was running for office.

During her testimony, Noem suggested Trump had signed off on the massive ad spend. The President's recollection was, shall we say, "different." A Louisiana senator who questioned her later told party insiders that after the hearing, Trump called him, and it was clear the President was boiling over what he saw as her throwing him under the bus. As one White House source told a New York tabloid, the "stunning non-answer" about the affair might have been the final straw for the optics, but lying about his approval of the ads was the personal betrayal.

By Thursday, it was done. Trump announced on his social media platform that Noem was out as DHS Secretary, shuffling her off to a newly created role as "Special Envoy for The Shield of the Americas". It's a fancy title for what looks a lot like a graceful exit.

What Happens to Lewandowski Now?

As Noem goes, so goes her shadow. Party sources confirmed that Corey Lewandowski will also leave the department. When asked by a New York tabloid if he'd stay on in the administration, Lewandowski played it cool: "I haven't made that decision." He did, however, offer a courtesy nod to the incoming DHS boss, Senator Markwayne Mullin (R-OK), the former MMA fighter who once challenged a union boss to a fight during a Senate hearing. Mullin is Trump's pick to clean house, and you can bet he won't be taking any nonsense.

For Lewandowski, this exit is just another chapter in a wild book. If you want the origin story, you need to pick up a copy of Let Trump Be Trump: The Inside Story of His Rise to the Presidency, the book he co-authored with David Bossie. It's all in there: the chaos of the 2016 campaign, the palace intrigues, the "island of the misfit toys" that was that first operation. It reads like the playbook for the chaos we're seeing now.

Looking back at the last few months of Noem's tenure, the controversies stack up like a Jenga tower that was destined to fall:

  • The Minneapolis Deaths: Two U.S. citizens were killed by federal agents during an immigration enforcement operation, sparking outrage and a partial DHS shutdown.
  • The $220 Million Ad Blitz: A massive contract awarded to a firm run by the husband of her former spokesperson, featuring Noem heavily.
  • The "Blanket Row": Lewandowski reportedly barged into the cockpit of a government plane to complain about a misplaced heated blanket belonging to Noem, leading to the pilot getting fired.
  • The Open Secret: Persistent rumours of an affair between the two married officials, which made the workplace atmosphere at DHS a constant topic of gossip.

The House Minority Leader summed up the Democratic reaction to the sacking with just two words on social media: "ICE Barbie is gone. Good riddance." Love her or hate her, Noem's rapid rise and even faster fall is a classic Washington tale. And as always, standing just off-camera, influencing the contracts and causing the chaos, was Corey Lewandowski—the man who proved you don't need an official title to hold the matches.